The Harry Potter series and The Lord of the Rings series both transitioned to film pretty well.

It's hard to take a book and make a film though, as you lose so much of it.

Stephen King movies are good examples. They always get so stripped (the two-hour ones). The Stand was an exception, as a miniseries, it had time to
cover things. The Langoliers was another one, and another miniseries, and Rose Red.

I agree with Gazrok on the transition thing. Bret Easton Ellis comes to mind when I think of this. Anyone who has read Less than Zero, American
Psycho, The rules of Attraction, The Informers then watched their movie counterpart will get what I'm saying anyways .............

3. A Clockwork Orange (aside from omitting the last chapter where Alex renounces his return to evil and goes proper good/normal)

2. 1984

1. The trial (Welles did a great job with this considering that the actual novel was incomplete and that which is was never truly organized to Kafka's
liking before his passing.)

If some geek comes on here as say's Harry Potter or Lord of the Rings ,I'll shoot myself I swear ! Oh dam , too late for that ! Bang ! Thud !
Members my death was not a suicide , it's a conspiracy I tell ya .Just when I was going to reveal everythinguhhh...........EPA... EPAHHHHHHHHHHHH
...........................

The Thorn Birds
A love story that starts when Meggie Cleary is nothing more than a young girl and falls under the charm of Father Ralph. Spanning through the years,
Meggie and Father Ralph fall helplessly in love, a love forbidden by Father Ralph's faith. Meggie marries Luke, a man with big dreams and ideas, but
no ambition to follow them through. After the birth of her first child, Meggie heads for a private holiday, followed by Father Ralph where their love
is finally allowed free reign.
Father Ralph now in Rome knows nothing of the son he sired with Meggie and Meggie will not share her secret with him. Over the years, you follow the
lives and loves of the entire Cleary family as they struggle with the farm, the war, and themselves.

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